Abstract

As a multi-switching power electronic circuit with complex variable topology, the three-level active neutral point clamped (ANPC) converter is a complex system with strong coupling and low linearity. It has numerous high-speed switching devices, a large number of switch states, and a high matrix dimension. Modeling each switch will undoubtedly further increase the circuit size. While in real-time simulation, updating all states of the model to produce outputs within a single time step results in a significant computational load, causing an increasing consumption of FPGA hardware resources as the number of switches and circuit size grow. In order to solve this problem, the current common practice is to decompose the entire complex power electronic system into smaller serial subsystems for modeling. The overall modeling approach for small circuits can be achieved, but when the size of the circuit increases, the overall modeling complexity and difficulty are increased or even impossible to achieve. Decoupling power electronic circuits with this decomposition into subsystem modeling not only reduces the matrix dimension and simplifies the modeling process, but also improves the computational efficiency of the real-time simulator. However, this inevitably generates simulation delays between different subsystems, leading to numerical oscillations. In an effort to overcome this challenge, this paper adopts the method of parallel computation after subsystem partitioning. There is no one-beat delay between different subsystems, and there is no loss of accuracy, which can improve the numerical stability of the modeling and can effectively reduce the step length of real-time simulation and alleviate the problem of real-time simulation resource consumption. In addition, to address the problems of low accuracy due to the traditional forward Euler method as a solver and the possibility of significant errors at some moments, this paper uses a modified prediction correction method to solve the discrete mathematical model, which provides higher accuracy as well as higher stability. And, different from the traditional control method, this paper uses an improved FCS-MPC strategy to control the switching transients of the ANPC model, which achieves a very good control effect. Finally, a simulation step size of less than 60 ns is successfully realized by empirical demonstration on the Speedgoat test platform. Meanwhile, the accuracy of our model can be objectively evaluated by comparing it with the simulation results of the Matlab Simpower system.

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Publication Info

Year
2025
Type
article
Volume
17
Issue
12
Pages
2121-2121
Citations
0
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Xin Gao, Yuanyuan Huang, Shaojie Li et al. (2025). Hardware-in-the-Loop Simulation of ANPC Based on Modified Predictor–Corrector Method. Symmetry , 17 (12) , 2121-2121. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym17122121

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DOI
10.3390/sym17122121

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